Chandigarh, May 21 – Haryana Government has taken significant steps in order to resolve long-standing land disputes and expedite property partition by enacting the Haryana Land Revenue (Amendment) Act, 2025. The amendment in the Act specifically counters the complexities arising from joint land holdings, particularly among family members.
Financial Commissioner and Additional Chief Secretary, Home Department, Smt. Sumita Misra explained that the new law, called the Haryana Land Revenue (Amendment) Act, 2025, caters a big issue when many family members own a piece of land together. Earlier, if brothers, sisters, or other blood relatives owned land jointly, it was very difficult for the government to step in and help divide it unless there was a common consensus.
Dr. Misra informed that the Haryana Land Revenue (Amendment) Act, 2025, now broadens the applicability of Section 111-A to include virtually all landowners, with the specific and only exception of husband and wife. This means that disputes over jointly owned land among blood relations, which constitute a large number of pending cases, can now be addressed more efficiently.
To further accelerate the resolution of these disputes, Revenue Officers are empowered to issue proactive “suo motu” (on their own motion) notices to co-sharers in joint land holdings. These notices will encourage co-sharers to partition the land by mutual consent within six months, aiming to regularize land records and establish clear ownership for individual landowners, thereby preventing future conflicts or court intervention, Dr. Misra added.
She further informed that another key change is the omission of Section 114, which previously required Revenue Officers to ascertain if other co-sharers also desired partition and to add them as applicants. Now, any single co-owner can ask for their share to be divided without needing approval from others. This means the process will be much faster, and landowners can get their own specific piece of land to use as they wish, reducing court cases.
Dr. Sumita Misra asserted that these amendments are a direct response to the need for faster, simpler, and more citizen-centric land governance. The objective is to significantly reduce delays and legal disputes in partition matters, empower individual landowners to claim and utilize their share effectively, and overall simplify revenue procedures.